Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] of [art] [noun] at " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It 's not my part of the world at all ,
2 Alt and associates , in their study of the electorate at the time of the February 1974 election , argue that it is easy to exaggerate the extent to which voters are politically illiterate , unfamiliar with issues , and unable to identify the policy stands of the parties .
3 The picture flashed into her mind of the coffee-room at the Feathers inn at Newark .
4 Though put beautifully into the mouth of Hannah by the storyteller , it did not have its origins with her , but , to judge from its mention of the king at the end , must have been composed for national celebration at some point during the time of the monarchy .
5 Yeah I I think , had they given their side of the argument at the onset , then er things would 've been different .
6 Since they evidently have a rate control " knob " on their " stroboscope " , why do n't they turn it permanently to maximum , thereby keeping their perception of the world at its most acute , all the time , to meet any emergency ?
7 They have to hurry — a giant highway is due to be driven through their neck of the woods at any moment .
8 The rest is up to the children , music included ; as Runswick and music director Terry Edwards discovered on their rounds of the schools at an earlier stage in the project , the teachers had only to supervise , rarely to prompt or invent-solid preparation indeed for the GCSE 's new emphasis on composition .
9 The Conservatives have been in Government , either alone or in coalitions dominated by their party , for sixty-seven of the past 100 years , and their share of the vote at general elections has rarely fallen below 40 per cent .
10 Instead it is the government of the day which is able to take advantage of the flexibility of the system to impose its definition of a convention at any particular time .
11 In Yugoslavia the bishops washed their hands of the apparitions at Medjugorje .
12 Walton J. did not purport to decide the case on the basis of a payment made under a mistake of law and I agree with the doubts expressed by Romer J. in Twyford v. Manchester Corporation [ 1946 ] Ch. 236 , 241 , as to this being a true case of money paid under a mistake of law having regard to the plaintiffs ' expressions as to their understanding of the law at the time of the payments .
13 Rover will start production of its version of the car at its Cowley works in Oxford early next year .
14 It happened during a holiday tour Chris and her husband John took in China after he completed his part of the OSART at Daya Bay nuclear power station ( see below left ) .
15 Later , it was said that where there had been a fundamental breach of contract , that is , if one party fails to carry out his part of the bargain at all or attempts to render a performance totally different from that contemplated , then that party could not rely on an exclusion clause ( see Karsales ( Harrow ) Ltd. v Wallis [ 1956 ] ) .
16 Gregory King , in his description of the population at the end of the seventeenth century , made a famous distinction between those who " increased " and those who " diminished " the wealth of the kingdom .
17 As early as March or April 1330 Edward III was attempting to assert his independence of the regime at court and to build up a body of supporters loyal to him rather than to Mortimer and Isabella .
18 The pun on Spinoza was too good for Coleridge to resist , and the remarkable nose he attributed to Walsh may well have been borrowed from his memories of the innkeeper at the Castle of Comfort , on the road from Stowey to Holford : his nose , which was locally famous , was said to be as big as a fist and ‘ well warted ’ .
19 Tim Rodber had a much better game that at Murrayfield and won his share of the ball at the tail of the line-outs , but it remained an area where Ireland did hold their own through the excellent play of Neil Francis and Brian Robinson .
20 His peregrinations of the islands at election time were always diverting public entertainments .
21 At one stage of his tour of the camp at Caister-on-Sea , the prince pinned a badge proclaiming ‘ Charlie Says Rave On ’ to his lapel , and seemed fascinated by the idea of all-night rave parties .
22 In his handling of the event at the time " to inspire awe in those who fought along with him " , Charles again showed a talent for exploiting symbols .
23 It is a pity that our share of the glory at CERN — Britain pays a lot of money into this uniquely successful collaboration each year — is marred by European complaints that this country is not pulling its weight in international projects , such as nuclear safety research ( see opposite ) or fusion .
  Next page